Love-at-Arms by Rafael Sabatini
page 110 of 322 (34%)
page 110 of 322 (34%)
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This time he did not so much as scream. He hung there, dangling at the
rope's end, his mouth all bloody, his face ghastly in its glistening pallor, and of his eyes naught showing save the whites. He hung there, and moaned piteously and incessantly. Martin glanced questioningly at Gian Maria, and his eyes very plainly inquired whether they had not better cease. But Gian Maria paid no heed to him. "Will that suffice you?" he asked the fool. "Will you speak now?" But the fool's only answer was a moan, whereupon again, at the Duke's relentless signal, he was swung aloft. But at the terror of a fourth drop, more fearful than any of its three predecessors, he awoke very suddenly to the impossible horror of his position. That this agony would endure until he died or fainted, he was assured. And since he seemed incapable of either fainting or dying, suffer more he could not. What was heaven or hell to him then that the thought of either could efface the horror of this torture and strengthen him to continue to endure the agony of it? He could endure no more--no, not to save a dozen souls if he had had them: "I'll speak," he screamed. "Let me down, and you shall have his name, Lord Duke." "Pronounce it first, or the manner of your descent shall be as the others." Peppe passed his tongue over his bleeding lips, hung still and spoke. "It was your cousin," he panted, " Francesco del Falco, Count of Aquila." |
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